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Protein Science (2005), 14:341-350. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Copyright © 2005 The Protein Society
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An engineered chaperonin caging a guest protein: Structural insights and potential as a protein expression tool

Masahiro Furutani1, Jun-Ichi Hata1, Yasuhito Shomura2,7, Keisuke Itami3, Takao Yoshida4, Yoshitaka Izumoto1, Akiko Togi1, Akira Ideno1, Takuo Yasunaga3, Kunio Miki2,5 and Tadashi Maruyama4,6

1 Research and Development Institute, Sekisui Chemical Co. Ltd., Shimamoto-cho, Mishima-gun, Osaka 618-8589, Japan
2 Department of Chemistry, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan
3 Department of Bioscince and Bioinfomatics, Kyushu Institute of Technology, Iizuka-shi, Fukuoka 820-8502, Japan
4 Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), Yokosuka 237-0061, Japan
5 RIKEN Harima Institute/SPring-8, Mikazuki-cho, Sayo-gun, Hyogo 679-5148, Japan
6 Marine Biotechnology Institute, Kamaishi, Iwate 026-0001, Japan

(RECEIVED August 12, 2004; FINAL REVISION October 21, 2004; ACCEPTED October 22, 2004)

The structure of a chaperonin caging a substrate protein is not quite clear. We made engineered group II chaperonins fused with a guest protein and analyzed their structural and functional features. Thermococcus sp. KS-1 chaperonin {alpha}-subunit (TCP) which forms an eightfold symmetric double-ring structure was used. Expression plasmids were constructed which carried two or four TCP genes ligated head to tail in phase and a target protein gene at the 3' end of the linked TCP genes. Electron microscopy showed that the expressed gene products with the molecular sizes of ~120 kDa (di-TCP) and ~230 kDa (tetra-TCP) formed double-ring complexes similar to those of wild-type TCP. The tetra-TCP retained ATPase activity and its thermostability was significantly higher than that of the wild type. A 260-kDa fusion protein of tetra-TCP and green fluorescent protein (GFP, 27 kDa) was able to form the double-ring complexes with green fluorescence. Image analyses indicated that the GFP moiety of tetra-TCP/GFP fusion protein was accommodated in the central cavity, and tetra-TCP/GFP formed the closed-form similar to that crystallographically resolved in group II chaperonins. Furthermore, it was suggested that caging GFP expanded the cavity around the bottom. Using this tetra-TCP fusion strategy, two virus structural proteins (21–25 kDa) toxic to host cells or two antibody fragments (25–36 kDa) prone to aggregate were well expressed in the soluble fraction of Escherichia coli. These fusion products also assembled to double-ring complexes, suggesting encapsulation of the guest proteins. The antibody fragments liberated by site-specific protease digestion exhibited ligand-binding activities.

Keywords: chaperonin; structure; archaea; fusion protein; protein folding; protein expression

Abbreviations: TCP, Thermococcus sp. KS-1 (JCM 11816) chaperonin {alpha}-subunit • hCR, human antibody heavy chain constant region (CH1–CH2–CH3) • HEL, hen egg lysozyme • HBs, hepatitis B surface antigen • HCc, hepatitis C core antigen

Article and publication are at http://www.proteinscience.org/cgi/doi/10.1110/ps.041043905.


Reprint requests to: Masahiro Furutani, Sekisui Chemical Co. Ltd., Hyakuyama 2-1, Shimamoto-cho, Mishima-gun, Osaka 618-8589, Japan; e-mail: furutani002{at}sekisui.jp; fax: 81-75-962-8903.


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